THE N W YORKER scarcely guide my feet aright. It was as jf I were light in the head, or had taken too much wine I could account for the feeling bv remembering that I had been on foot all day and had not taken much food.... I read prayers morn- ing and afternoon and my father preached for me In the morning from Acts on Peter and Cornelius and in the afternoon on the adoration of the Shep- herds and the Wise Men. Holy Com- munion, 8 Guests. Alms 11/6. The church was fearfully overheated. I felt quite faint and could hardly draw breath or finish reading the Service." But then he sinks deeper into sleep and the dream goes on as before: After luncheon the archers went out to shoot at a beautiful archery ground by the riverside. The ladies sat watching under the trees while the arrows flashed past with a "rhistling rush. and the glorious afternoon sun shone mellow upon the beeches. . . . The ground was still wet and shining with the rain, and the gigantic shadow of the gate projected by the moon- lIght was cast far up the avenue in huge bars upon the shining ground. . . . The broad, shining reaches of the river winding down between rocks and woods, gentle rushing everlasting murmur of the water, the sharp clicking of the reels, the low voices of the men as they sat a little way off on the bank, the Colonel in grey standing out on the rocks like a heron fishing and Charlie standing like another heron up the next broad bend of the stream, while a stranger sat on the opposite bank watching us across the river. . . . The country was wrapped in one vast winding sheet of snow, the roads were dumb, and there was no sound but the swift sharp rustle of the driving snow in the hedges and hollies. . . . The old grey manor house and the Church T ower stood framed as in a picture by the golden elms. It was a beautiful pastoral scene, calm and peaceful. Suddenly some- one began playing a beautiful air upon a horn in front of Langley House. The soft clear notes floated across the meadows ex- quisitely sweet till some barbarian stopped the player rudely in the midst of the lovely air. I could have cried with vexation. . . . Last night again there was a considerable fall of snow and the earth was white till noon. Amid the wastes of snow and the whistling blasts of the winter winds the blackbirds and thrushes were singing un- daunted. Surely the birds must have great faith. . . . As I came down from the hill into the valley across the golden meadows and along the flower scented hedges a great wave of emotion and happiness rose up ", ithin me. . . . In June of 1878, Kilvert was offered the chaplaincy at Cannes and refused it. The diary ends the followIng March; why, we do not know. It may have been-it very likely was-continued past this pOInt. That same spring, Kil- vert met in Paris an Englishwoman named Elizabeth Anne Roland. They were married in August, and went to spend their honeymoon in Scotland F"ive weeks later, quite suddenly, the ö OrIgInal ound- traèk RefOr(i1n d{ fICO Felhru 'u E rIA \1v.<; ( b NIno Ro t- f he ':<J \'V ('et hft'f of Roma.n Cafe Souet v .. d rl V{' Hd unu ng, se u< f Ii P rt.t{" . U"tUSIC t onl .' . ""}, 1 n O' hhn '\\-lnlung uOU'>> n,.'rmlfd mastt'rp . Vd and pral\t'd In Ita1)f Is JP'la . lirao Cf pan. n pU).gAmenCJ t t ....... i ., n <t> . 177 the UVING RSO original ; : soundtrack -/ 0{ .' , \ .,.. '.l\ .;' < , ,... .. ..... .i /j'l .,' .... I' f':: 11"7 :::: t . ::. .,Þ".. 0.:: . y .... -\.. ie' t <."# "'" . .:" :::;- ..:::::;: ,.,., .. '.;.- .. ...... . . , --- 'La Dolce Vita/' the rnonumentalltalian film, has set off fireworks up and down Europe winning 26 important prizes! Now it has exploded on the A nlerican scene, and the critics are ecstatic. "Sensational," says the N. Y. Tinles .lts score, full of splashing rhythms and haunting themes, is music of piercing em,otion. 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